Monday, May 5, 2025

The Holy Spirit – Revealing and Convicting (10)

 Adoption - I


In our previous reflection we considered that all that the Father has, Jesus Christ also has; and that all that Jesus Christ has we also have in Him. We briefly looked at what it means to be a joint heir (Romans 8:17) with Christ. When we arrive at the Holy of Holies of John Chapter 17, we will hopefully see the confirmation and congruity of these threads, for we are called to be one with the Trinity as the People of God, the Bride, the Temple, the sons and daughters of the Living God.  


Now I would like us to ponder what the Bible means when it speaks to us of adoption. This is a central thought in the Himalayas of Romans Chapter 8, and yet it is something that we miss, that we typically do not understand, and because of this we forgo much of our high calling as daughters and sons of the Living God and joint heirs with Christ. I hope you will give prayerful thought to the Bible’s portrayal of adoption as we work through this, it may take some time, but we can always trust the Holy Spirit to lead us deeper into Jesus and His Word.


I will begin with a statement: In Biblical adoption, you must first be a child of the Father before you can be adopted by Him. 


To put it another way, only those who are already children of God in Christ can be adopted. 


I am making these statements because they go against everything most of us know about adoption and I want to get our attention. Our present-day concept of adoption is the opposite of the above statements, in our world the reason for adoption is to make someone a member of a family, we have no reason to adopt anyone already within the family – and yet, as I hope we will see, Biblical adoption is not about bringing someone into the Family of God, it is about what occurs to those already in the Family of God.


There are three places in the New Testament where the word “adoption” is used, and we will explore all three; Romans 8:12 – 25; Galatians 3:23 – 4:11; Ephesians 1:1 – 14.  What patterns do you see in these passages? Are there similarities? Before we begin with these passages, there are two observations I want to make.


What is our approach, or methodology, in understanding Scripture? If you have read much of my writing these past few years you may realize that I believe that we have suffered a catastrophic failure in our approach to the Bible with our various interpretive methods, including the historical – grammatical method. While elements of some methods can be helpful, they ought not to be the engine that powers the train. We simply cannot understand Scripture and see Jesus Christ, who is the focus of all Scripture, without the illumination and revelation of the Holy Spirit; Jesus speaks to us of the Holy Spirit in the Upper Room (John chapters 13 – 17) and Paul explicitly writes of our dependence on the Holy Spirit in understanding the things of God in 1 Corinthians 1:17 – 2:16. 


As I have written and said many times, if Jesus and the New Testament writers were in seminary, they would receive failing grades in exegesis, for their use of the Old Testament hardly aligns with the historical – grammatical method. The same is true of the Church Fathers, who, as a whole, demonstrate a Christology that far surpasses what we see today and a love and command of Scripture that dwarfs us. 


I am deeply sorry that I didn’t realize this when I was pastoring, and most certainly when I was in seminary. As I look back, I did have professors who were not slaves to naturalistic approaches to Scripture, and I surely believe that all of my professors were fine men and women, people of integrity – we are products of our systems, and when the systems produce our paychecks it does make it difficult to gain perspective. 


Now if the above doesn’t make any sense to you right now, don’t worry about it. However, I do have a point in writing it, and that is that we are going to look at the Bible and only the Bible in pondering adoption; yes, I may make a reference or two to adoption in the Roman Empire, but the core of our focus will be the above three New Testament passages. 


I have read various perspectives on Biblical adoption for decades, many of them confusing, many tentative, most falling far short of the glory of the Biblical passages, and many not thought out at all. Many of them are so mired in the historical – grammatical method that they chase their tails trying to pin down what Paul meant in his historical context and often come to no firm conclusion. 


Some arrive at the correct conclusion without incorporating the best information or knowledge to get there, but their base instincts in Christ nevertheless lead them into the glory of Romans, Galatians, and Ephesians – these are often folks not academically trained and so they are free to respond to the Holy Spirit without the constraints of naturalistic exegesis and hermeneutics. They “see” the glory of sonship, the glory of the Firstborn (Romans 8:29), the glory of the Father “bringing many sons to glory” (Hebrews 2:10).


(One of the consequences of our naturalistic methods, including the historical – grammatical method, is that we have created accessibility barriers to the Bible for the average person, once again the people have been led to believe that only the professionals can truly understand the Bible and that the priesthood of the believer is a fiction.)


The second observation concerns the idea that God adopts us into His family. As I wrote above, this is not what Biblical adoption is about, in the New Testament you must first be a child to be adopted. While we will explore this in-depth when we work through the three passages cited above, I want us to think about what the Bible teaches about becoming a child of God.


“But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become the children of God, even to those who believe in His name, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God” (John 1:12 – 13).


“Jesus answered and said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). 


“That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit” (John 3:6).


“But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ” (Ephesians 2:4 – 5). 


“For you have been born again not of seed which is perishable but imperishable” (1 Peter 1:23). 


We become children of God when we are born of the Holy Spirit, when the very life of God enters into us. This is obviously not like our understanding of adoption, for it is impossible for a human to cause another human to be born again with the adoptive parent’s very life. This is but one way in which what the Bible means by adoption is not what we think of as adoption. 


I also point this out to ask us to think twice before we use the term adoption to indicate what it means to come into a relationship with the Father through the Son – for it bypasses the necessity of the new birth and can cause confusion with people. Furthermore, as I hope we will see, Biblical adoption is for those who are already the children of God, it is not associated with the process and experience of becoming a child of God (other than that becoming a child of God sets us on the maturation process of adoption).


While you will have to be your own judge of these things, hopefully in communion with the Holy Spirit and the Word of God, there is no doubt in my heart and mind that if adoption were an element of today’s Gospel, as it originally was, and if God’s People saw their calling by the Father in the Son to live as sons and daughters in the adoption process, that our lives would be dramatically different and that our witness to the world would be dynamic in Jesus. We simply do not know who we are in Christ or who He is within us. 


How critical is adoption? 


“For the anxious longing of the creation waits eagerly for the revealing [this is the adoption process] of the sons of God…the creation itself also will be set free from its slavery to corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God” (see Romans 8). 


I hope you will be meditating on the above passages from Romans 8, Galatians 3 and 4, and Ephesians 1. The Lord willing, we’ll begin our exploration of them in the next post in this series. 


Wednesday, April 30, 2025

The Holy Spirit - Revealing and Convicting (9)

 

“All things that the Father has are Mine; therefore I said that He takes of Mine and will disclose it to you” (John 16:15).


Our life in Christ is to be a never-ending experience of maturation in Him, of seeing Him, of living in Him, of knowing Him, of deepening friendship, of deepening and heightened joy, of experiencing and manifesting His Cross, and of being Christ to others. (See 2 Cor. 3:17 – 18; Rom. 12:1 – 2; 1 John 3:1 – 3; Rom. 8:29; Heb. 2:9 – 13). 


This is NOT a self-improvement project, this is not about us, it is about Jesus and our Father, it is about being faithful to them and to one another, it is about manifesting Jesus Christ to the world and the cosmos – it is about moving from childhood to adolescence and young adulthood, to becoming fathers and mothers in Christ (1 John 2:12 – 14). It is about being placed, in Christ, as sons of the Living God and learning to live as sons and daughters in the Son. 


O dear friends, if Jesus had a maturation process in the Incarnation, why can’t we see that our Father is calling us into the same process of sonship? “Although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered. And having been made perfect, He became to all those who obey Him the source of eternal salvation” (Heb. 5:8 – 9). 


No wonder Paul writes, “That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the koinonia of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; in order that I may attain to the resurrection of the dead. Not that I have already obtained it or have already become perfect, but I press on so that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus” (Phil. 3:10 – 12).


Consider what Jesus says to the Father, “The glory which You have given Me I have given to them, that they may be one, just as We are one” (John 17:22). The Father gives Jesus glory, and Jesus passes that very same glory onto, and into, us. 


The glory of the Son, which the Holy Spirit bestows on us, increases as we are transformed into the image of the Firstborn (Rom. 8:29; 2 Cor. 3:17 – 18) until that special Day unfolds which Paul writes of in 2 Thessalonians, “When He [Jesus] comes to be glorified in His saints…so that the name of our Lord Jesus will be glorified in you, and you in Him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ” (2 Th. 1:10, 12). 


Paul also speaks of the glory that Jesus gives us in Romans Chapter 8:


8:17, “that we may also be glorified in Him.”

8:18, “the glory that is to be revealed in us.”

8:21, “the freedom of the glory of the children of God.”

8:30, “and these whom He justified, He also glorified.” 


There is a sense, if we can receive it, that when Jesus prays, “Father, the hour has come; glorify Your Son, that the Son may glorify You,” (John 17:1) that Jesus prays this not only for Himself, the Head of the Body, but for the entire Body. That is, He prays this not only for Himself as the Only Begotten Son of God, but also for the corporate Son of God, for the One New Man of which Jesus Christ is the Head. (This may take a while to ponder, but don’t give up on it!)


And so we read in Romans 8:16 – 18:


“The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him. For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed in us.”


Peters writes that our “inheritance is imperishable and undefiled, that it will not fade away, and that it is reserved in heaven for you” (1 Peter 1:4). 


In Revelation 21:7, “He who overcomes will inherit these things, and I will be his God and he will be My son.”


The term “joint heir” is important, for it means that we inherit and share in 100% of the inheritance together with Jesus Christ and with one another. There is no “mine” in heaven, there is no personal property in heaven, there is no individual title to land (if you will) in our joint inheritance – as joint heirs we share all there is in Jesus Christ, as He shares all there is in the Father. “All things that the Father has are Mine,” Jesus says, and in turn we see that all that Jesus has is ours in Him. 


We are “heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ.” What greater inheritance could there possibly be than to inherit an eternal relationship with God and Christ? What more could we desire than that the Holy Spirit disclose to us more about Jesus and the Father? Do we not want to see and experience more of Jesus? Do we not want to see more of Jesus and His glory in one another? Do we not want to see others come to know our wonderful Lord and Savior?


While the “what is to come” of John 16:13 does indeed include the trajectories of the world and the Kingdom, as evidenced in passages such as 2 Peter Chapter 3, 2 Thessalonians Chapter 2, and Revelation, the center of gravity and focus of these passages is Jesus Christ – they are meant to reveal Jesus Christ to us and not to appeal to our curiosity. The core of “what is to come” is Jesus Christ and our relationship in Him, it is our ever expanding and deepening koinonia in Him and with the Father, and with the Holy Spirit, and with one another. 


Hence we have passages such as Ephesians 3:14 – 19, so that we might be “filled up to all the fullness of God.” 


What matters about today and tomorrow is our transformation into the image of the Firstborn Son (Rom. 8:29), our growing up into Him who is the Head (Eph. 4:15), so that Christ might be revealed in us in order that creation may be delivered from the bondage of corruption (Rom. 8:20 – 22). The trajectory of the world and its powers is judgment (Daniel Chapter 2), the trajectory of the Kingdom is Jesus Christ, the Stone of Daniel Chapter 2. How foolish we are to take our cues from the world’s news and headlines! We have a far greater storyline than anything the world offers – it is the glory of the Son, the glory of the Firstborn and His many brothers and sisters. Our Father is indeed “bringing many sons to glory” (Heb. 2:10). 


In our next reflection, the Lord willing, we’ll look at one for the most misunderstood terms and concepts in the Bible, the word “adoption,” and we’ll hopefully see how this informs what we’ve been pondering. 


More about Jesus would I know,

More of His grace to others show;

More of His saving fulness see,

More of His love who died for me.

 

More, more about Jesus,

More, more about Jesus;

More of His saving fulness see,

  More of His love who died for me.

2

More about Jesus let me learn,

More of His holy will discern;

Spirit of God my teacher be,

Showing the things of Christ to me.

3

More about Jesus; in His Word,

Holding communion with my Lord;

Hearing His voice in every line,

Making each faithful saying mine.

4

More about Jesus; on His throne,

Riches in glory all His own;

More of His kingdom’s sure increase;

More of His coming, Prince of Peace.

By Eliza Hewitt